Bitcoin Forum

Economy => Economics => Topic started by: bornil267645 on June 05, 2015, 01:47:37 PM



Title: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: bornil267645 on June 05, 2015, 01:47:37 PM
In a recent blog post, Truthcoin (not an altcoin) Creator Paul Sztorc made an interesting point about how the Internet is changing the traditional definition of money. In the past, an asset needed to serve as a medium exchange, unit of account, and store of value to be useful as money; however, the Internet is quickly removing two parts of this equation. As Sztorc explained:

”In fact, because modern computing [1] allows prices to be quickly and effortlessly recalculated and redisplayed, and [2] allows e-transactions to be fast and cheap, we have many options for fast roundtrip conversions that drastically reduces money’s need to serve as a unit of account or even as a medium of exchange. This leaves only value-storage as a discriminator among money-types.”

The overall goal of the blog post was to finally dispel the contention that bitcoin cannot succeed due to its deflationary nature. Part of Sztorc’s argument rests on the idea that the Internet and bitcoin are changing the very definition of money.

http://insidebitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/big-graphic.png

Dismissing unit of account

If being a unit of account were to remain a requirement for money, then bitcoin would be in trouble. Nearly every business or individual who accepts bitcoin still prices their goods or services in terms of the local fiat currency, but this has not been an issue for the digital commodity. This is due to the fact that essentially all bitcoin wallets are able to display bitcoin balances and payment amounts denominated in popular fiat currencies. When sending a payment from one bitcoin wallet to another, many users enter the total value they wish to send priced in US dollars, euros, or some other fiat currency. Online retailers also have their prices change on a second-by-second basis in terms of bitcoin. In fact, a real-world version of this sort of price-adjusting system is also available for brick and mortar stores.

Dismissing medium of exchange

Although consumers are able to shop at many retailers with their bitcoin, most of these bitcoin-accepting outlets don’t actually hold any bitcoin. Services such as BitPay and Coinbase are used to instantly convert the bitcoin to fiat currency at the point of sale. Noted bitcoin critic Jeffrey Robinson likes to say that this means practically no businesses or individuals are actually accepting bitcoin for goods and services.

Of course, the key takeaway here is not whether or not the merchant decides to keep the bitcoin. The only part of the process that matters is a bitcoin holder is able to exchange the bitcoin for goods and services. As more assets become digitized over time, the costs associated with switching between those assets will continue to decline. In other words, consumers may be able to pay via a wide range of assets that can be converted into whatever the merchant wishes to receive.

Bitcoin as a store of value

Pztorc makes the case that bitcoin will become the preferred money because of its limited supply. This is due to the open-source nature of the technology behind bitcoin. As Pztorc points out:

”I hope it is now clear: if Bitcoin didn’t have a fixed money supply, it would be replaced by something which did. It would have happened with a single fork and a little publicity (rich BTC-owners could spread the following word “come with us on this hard fork at Date D, and your money will automatically be more valuable”). Since Satoshi knew that this would happen (and as non-equilibrium behavior doesn’t last long [by definition], and as hard forks endanger the digital-scarcity value-proposition / create double-spend opportunities), he built it the right way the first time.”

Pztorc also explains that a decreasing money supply would not work because “nothing of consequence occurs whatsoever” in such a system. If every holder of the money loses the same percentage value of the holdings on a yearly basis, then nothing has changed. Pztroc added, “If coins are destroyed randomly, risk of wealth-loss is introduced (pointlessly).”

Although bitcoin has performed well as a store of value since its creation, its short-term volatility is still an issue for many would-be adopters. Of course this volatility has become less noticeable over time. In fact, the digital commodity has proven to be a worthy contender to some fiat currencies in terms of price stability in 2015. Additionally, bitcoin also comes with other features, such as censorship resistance and a lack of counterparty risk, that are not found with digitized versions of fiat currencies.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: V for Varoufakis on June 05, 2015, 02:44:04 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: AtheistAKASaneBrain on June 05, 2015, 03:56:06 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: azguard on June 05, 2015, 05:44:01 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

You are right. Money is just paper or card to pay/buy but bitcoin or any other crypto for that mater is something completely different. BTC is key and primary for internet sales or similar in near future for that. Key thing is small transaction fee that will be most used in future of transaction.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: vvv8 on June 05, 2015, 06:43:37 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

well put


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: BillyBobZorton on June 05, 2015, 07:06:27 PM
Everyone running any kind of ledger or storage of data and transactions knows blockchain technology does it better. No longer you need to store hundreds of papers, HDs and whatnot, filled with excel spreadsheets prone to modification and corruption. Now the ultimate ledger is possible: non-modifiable, non-corruptible, non-fallible and spread-worldwide across every sing computer running a node. It's pretty insane.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: edric on June 05, 2015, 09:35:53 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.
Couldn't agree more. We're headed towards the future with crypto currency leading the helm.
Internet is indeed changing the 'conventional' definition of money.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: aso118 on June 06, 2015, 02:11:27 AM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: azguard on June 06, 2015, 06:07:43 AM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

first step would be to accept all countries btc ass payment (something like most of europe euro)


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: qiwoman2 on June 06, 2015, 07:16:28 AM
With more and more world governments and politicians being exposed, digital currency in general might slowly overtake fiat money, not just from a technological standpoint but from a moral one as well. Also many people don't have access to bank accounts or just can't get a bank account but they do have access to the Internet, so for many it will be the only way to use money through a digital source.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Buttknuckle on June 06, 2015, 07:19:07 AM
I disagree with much of the conclusions.  I will only tackle one because I don't feel like writing an essay right now.

The only reason that bitcoin is not useful as a unit of account is because it is not widely adopted.  For example if I want to start a business making cakes I have to adjust to local or international fiat whether or not I want to.  The suppliers that provide sugar, flour, etc do not accept bitcoins for payment yet.  When they do this conclusion becomes null and void.

Edit: The second conclusion can be refuted in a similar manner.



Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Amph on June 06, 2015, 07:57:22 AM
I disagree with much of the conclusions.  I will only tackle one because I don't feel like writing an essay right now.

The only reason that bitcoin is not useful as a unit of account is because it is not widely adopted.  For example if I want to start a business making cakes I have to adjust to local or international fiat whether or not I want to.  The suppliers that provide sugar, flour, etc do not accept bitcoins for payment yet.  When they do this conclusion becomes null and void.

Edit: The second conclusion can be refuted in a similar manner.



this is vastly related to regulation, many merchants/suppliers are also waiting for regulation in they country, before start to move in the bitcoin jungle, they don't want to deal with possible hassle with their government in the future

they want that everything is settled in the right way before starting


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Q7 on June 06, 2015, 08:54:22 AM
First of all, bitcoin does not have to refer or take the fiat value as a benchmark to determine the price. Maybe for now, yes, it's happening but I foresee that one day when the infrastructure has expanded and bitcoin has reached mainstream adoption, we really don't need to refer to that anymore. I hope you take that into consideration.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: ThEmporium on June 06, 2015, 04:33:37 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

first step would be to accept all countries btc ass payment (something like most of europe euro)
Good thought, But it need rigorous campaign around the world to introduce Bitcoin, there should be some innovative campaign to be initiated in block wise in all the regions, most of the targets to be implemented on urban areas. It needs real and effective planning, and also it is not so easy to convince all the Government sectors, it requires greater understanding for them to study about Bitcoin as well as to get trained in selling and buying Bitcoin transatctions.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: yayayo on June 06, 2015, 11:32:32 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

Experience suggests otherwise. Austrian economics is the only sane economic school out there. Keynesians will be added to the trash heap of history once their experiment comes to an end (very soon).

The Internet enables efficient bartering through modern technology. But people will always be interested in holding an universal unit of value. Bitcoin fits in perfectly. I agree with Pztorc, that limited supply is an essential property of Bitcoin - but it's not the only one. Decentralization is of equal importance, because it ensures that holders of Bitcoin can not be expropriated.

ya.ya.yo!


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: V for Varoufakis on June 07, 2015, 06:34:30 AM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

Experience suggests otherwise. Austrian economics is the only sane economic school out there. Keynesians will be added to the trash heap of history once their experiment comes to an end (very soon).

The Internet enables efficient bartering through modern technology. But people will always be interested in holding an universal unit of value. Bitcoin fits in perfectly. I agree with Pztorc, that limited supply is an essential property of Bitcoin - but it's not the only one. Decentralization is of equal importance, because it ensures that holders of Bitcoin can not be expropriated.

ya.ya.yo!

Keynes was the greatest economist of all time.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: aso118 on June 08, 2015, 12:05:49 AM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

first step would be to accept all countries btc ass payment (something like most of europe euro)

That is not going to happen anytime soon. Countries will not let this happen unless they are forced to.
Even when they see the virtues of the blockchain, they are going to try to set up their own e-currency.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: azguard on June 08, 2015, 07:12:12 AM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

first step would be to accept all countries btc ass payment (something like most of europe euro)

That is not going to happen anytime soon. Countries will not let this happen unless they are forced to.
Even when they see the virtues of the blockchain, they are going to try to set up their own e-currency.

I know but still i have some fait in it. If we dont have something to hope for what it is good for.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: boopy265420 on June 08, 2015, 07:14:36 AM
The mankind is going through evolution from the very start so does the money.At start was barter system then gold and silver were used long time as currency.Later paper money took the place of those two metals and was doing great job.Now this is era of high speeding internet and future is for sure belonging to digital currencies.Digital currencies will replace the current paper money successfully as these are fast,easy and secure to transfer and transaction are transparent on blockchain.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: victoryboy on June 08, 2015, 08:05:40 AM
We will see even much more in coming years.Internet already has changed many old concepts.Financial system will not escape from its effects too.Digital era needs digital money in future.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: pereira4 on June 08, 2015, 05:55:09 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

There's only one way to find out... wait and see. I don't personally think a new coin will come and dethrone Bitcoin, it's network effect is way too powerful. What could potentially happen is the abolition of cash and all transactions done digitally, either in the old way or with a government issued digital currency to compete against Bitcoin, to keep their fiat scam going.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Amph on June 08, 2015, 06:22:42 PM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

actually bitcoin mania, was surpassed long time ago in the doge era with the 1200 peak(you can call it doge mania probably...) now bitcoin is a bit abandoned, and no one care about it anymore(minus its niche user fan base), so another step toward a new evolution of it, could help its life to grow


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: freeyourmind on June 09, 2015, 06:23:59 AM
Our current money was never designed with the internet in mind. We are dealing with deprecated forms of money in the modern internet era, this is why Bitcoin is the objective superior way to move and store value. Those that get it now, will reap the benefits later, this is pure physics.

Bitcoin may be superior to our current money, but will that be sufficient to succeed? Money evolves - we have had the gold standard, Bretton Woods system, floating exchange rate, etc. Bitcoin may be the flavour of today, but we can't be sure it will stay that way.

There's only one way to find out... wait and see. I don't personally think a new coin will come and dethrone Bitcoin, it's network effect is way too powerful. What could potentially happen is the abolition of cash and all transactions done digitally, either in the old way or with a government issued digital currency to compete against Bitcoin, to keep their fiat scam going.

If the government issued a digital currency, they would still control the money supply, and in a way, that is what the government does today.  Most transactions are done digitally.  The unique characteristic of Bitcoin would be that the supply is static right?


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: azguard on June 09, 2015, 08:55:35 AM
Think that governments realize that if transaction fee is the key.
We pay same amount for withdrawal/transfer any amount of BTC same fee.
For money you pay some percentage of amount that you transfer so this is something that they dont want with any digital current.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: GreenStox on June 09, 2015, 09:04:39 AM
In a recent blog post, Truthcoin (not an altcoin) Creator Paul Sztorc made an interesting point about how the Internet is changing the traditional definition of money. In the past, an asset needed to serve as a medium exchange, unit of account, and store of value to be useful as money; however, the Internet is quickly removing two parts of this equation. As Sztorc explained:

”In fact, because modern computing [1] allows prices to be quickly and effortlessly recalculated and redisplayed, and [2] allows e-transactions to be fast and cheap, we have many options for fast roundtrip conversions that drastically reduces money’s need to serve as a unit of account or even as a medium of exchange. This leaves only value-storage as a discriminator among money-types.”

The overall goal of the blog post was to finally dispel the contention that bitcoin cannot succeed due to its deflationary nature. Part of Sztorc’s argument rests on the idea that the Internet and bitcoin are changing the very definition of money.

http://insidebitcoins.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/big-graphic.png

Dismissing unit of account

If being a unit of account were to remain a requirement for money, then bitcoin would be in trouble. Nearly every business or individual who accepts bitcoin still prices their goods or services in terms of the local fiat currency, but this has not been an issue for the digital commodity. This is due to the fact that essentially all bitcoin wallets are able to display bitcoin balances and payment amounts denominated in popular fiat currencies. When sending a payment from one bitcoin wallet to another, many users enter the total value they wish to send priced in US dollars, euros, or some other fiat currency. Online retailers also have their prices change on a second-by-second basis in terms of bitcoin. In fact, a real-world version of this sort of price-adjusting system is also available for brick and mortar stores.

Dismissing medium of exchange

Although consumers are able to shop at many retailers with their bitcoin, most of these bitcoin-accepting outlets don’t actually hold any bitcoin. Services such as BitPay and Coinbase are used to instantly convert the bitcoin to fiat currency at the point of sale. Noted bitcoin critic Jeffrey Robinson likes to say that this means practically no businesses or individuals are actually accepting bitcoin for goods and services.

Of course, the key takeaway here is not whether or not the merchant decides to keep the bitcoin. The only part of the process that matters is a bitcoin holder is able to exchange the bitcoin for goods and services. As more assets become digitized over time, the costs associated with switching between those assets will continue to decline. In other words, consumers may be able to pay via a wide range of assets that can be converted into whatever the merchant wishes to receive.

Bitcoin as a store of value

Pztorc makes the case that bitcoin will become the preferred money because of its limited supply. This is due to the open-source nature of the technology behind bitcoin. As Pztorc points out:

”I hope it is now clear: if Bitcoin didn’t have a fixed money supply, it would be replaced by something which did. It would have happened with a single fork and a little publicity (rich BTC-owners could spread the following word “come with us on this hard fork at Date D, and your money will automatically be more valuable”). Since Satoshi knew that this would happen (and as non-equilibrium behavior doesn’t last long [by definition], and as hard forks endanger the digital-scarcity value-proposition / create double-spend opportunities), he built it the right way the first time.”

Pztorc also explains that a decreasing money supply would not work because “nothing of consequence occurs whatsoever” in such a system. If every holder of the money loses the same percentage value of the holdings on a yearly basis, then nothing has changed. Pztroc added, “If coins are destroyed randomly, risk of wealth-loss is introduced (pointlessly).”

Although bitcoin has performed well as a store of value since its creation, its short-term volatility is still an issue for many would-be adopters. Of course this volatility has become less noticeable over time. In fact, the digital commodity has proven to be a worthy contender to some fiat currencies in terms of price stability in 2015. Additionally, bitcoin also comes with other features, such as censorship resistance and a lack of counterparty risk, that are not found with digitized versions of fiat currencies.

No it does not, money is money and it always be.

Money will represent the amount of goods and services in the economy. That is the definition of money.

Obviously the current fiat crap does not, so its called counterfeited scam toilet paper rather than money.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: johnyj on June 09, 2015, 12:09:20 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

Money printers usually like Keynesian economics, because Austrian economics will limit their ability to print money and enslave others

However, I don't understand why so many people who don't have the right to print money also appreciate the Keynesian economics, what a mind job ;D


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: freeyourmind on June 09, 2015, 03:57:24 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

Money printers usually like Keynesian economics, because Austrian economics will limit their ability to print money and enslave others

However, I don't understand why so many people who don't have the right to print money also appreciate the Keynesian economics, what a mind job ;D

For the same reason that kids believe in the tooth fairy and Santa Claus...it was told to them and never questioned :)


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: manselr on June 09, 2015, 05:10:23 PM
Think that governments realize that if transaction fee is the key.
We pay same amount for withdrawal/transfer any amount of BTC same fee.
For money you pay some percentage of amount that you transfer so this is something that they dont want with any digital current.

Fees in the traditional banking system are expected and reasonable, the problem is when those fees are illegal (they have no justification). Bitcoin gives you the edge of low fees by dealing with your money, thats why a lot of people don't want to see fees increased in Bitcoin as some point for that being a potential solution for the blockchain blocksize problem.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: evenlydistributingfuture on June 09, 2015, 05:57:30 PM
We will see even much more in coming years.Internet already has changed many old concepts.Financial system will not escape from its effects too.Digital era needs digital money in future.



I think you're definitely on the right track. The Internet is going to change the financial system, for sure. Whether it's Bitcoin or not, cryptocurrency will be a big part of that. This got me thinking about how that might happen. When people are paying for many/most things with mobile payments and micropayments, will dynamic pricing be more widespread?

Uber famously is one sharing economy example of a new company that utilizes it, but will pricing things dynamically be the norm for most things once most purchases are made online and many of those via smartphone? Since circumstances like a store's inventory or any number of other factors can be considered and prices be adjusted in response to real-time conditions, is a changing price from minute to minute or hour to hour going to be normal? I haven't really thought about that before.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: muhrohmat on June 09, 2015, 06:05:03 PM
well im not tottaly over the btc theres currencies of world countries that will remain of course but the adapt its done into btc from the point of price that it took into 2007 and grown up


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: spazzdla on June 09, 2015, 06:36:35 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: mrhelpful on June 09, 2015, 06:41:36 PM
Theres not much competition imho.

Dollar has been around more then I dont know how many years, and the fiat system is way older. Its just considered as a "feature" similar to a chew toy, but people arent willing to go buy bitcoin unless there was some financial meltdown.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: V for Varoufakis on June 11, 2015, 07:21:25 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.

I also hate the law of gravity, but i can't do something about that! ;D Keynesian is like a law in economics.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: TheButterZone on June 11, 2015, 08:11:33 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.

I also hate the law of gravity, but i can't do something about that! ;D Keynesian is like a law in economics.

Which if you obey it, capital is destroyed.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: V for Varoufakis on June 11, 2015, 08:50:36 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.

I also hate the law of gravity, but i can't do something about that! ;D Keynesian is like a law in economics.

Which if you obey it, capital is destroyed.

Keynes saved capitalism from capitalists.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: TheButterZone on June 11, 2015, 09:12:10 PM
Destroying something is not saving it.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: johnyj on June 11, 2015, 09:56:37 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.

I also hate the law of gravity, but i can't do something about that! ;D Keynesian is like a law in economics.

Economy is not science, but politics. Science is about something that human can not change, the rule is set by nature. But economy is purely decided by human


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Amph on June 12, 2015, 08:07:25 AM
Destroying something is not saving it.

can you say the same about bitcoin? if we destroy some coin, the price should skyrocket, what if we stop the whole mining now, and we enter in the fee era in this exact moment? would definitely help the price of Bitcoin, or it will simply fade away...


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: TheButterZone on June 12, 2015, 08:53:23 AM
You can modify the supply/demand ratio without destroying BTC.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Hazir on June 12, 2015, 11:41:56 AM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

In a place where most disagree and hate keynesian , I doubt you'll find much love.

Also, no keynesian is moronic.

I also hate the law of gravity, but i can't do something about that! ;D Keynesian is like a law in economics.

Economy is not science, but politics. Science is about something that human can not change, the rule is set by nature. But economy is purely decided by human
Economy is subjective matter, that is the difference. But pure economy is also a logical science. The problem with economy's logic is that there is human factor playing big role there.
As we can see that bitcoin from logical point of view may be better currency that our FIATs but people are being stubborn to see that. if we can just ditch our economic prejudices world would be a better place.


Title: Re: The Internet is Changing the Very Definition of Money
Post by: Erdogan on June 12, 2015, 08:53:21 PM
Austrian economics is nonsense. Money is a medium of exchange and nothing else.

Money printers usually like Keynesian economics, because Austrian economics will limit their ability to print money and enslave others

However, I don't understand why so many people who don't have the right to print money also appreciate the Keynesian economics, what a mind job ;D

For the same reason that kids believe in the tooth fairy and Santa Claus...it was told to them and never questioned :)

Fear of taking responsibility. Or just fear. The stuff that governments are made from.